
ORPHEUS The Literary Journal of Lindsey Wilson College Vol. XX Spring 2018 No. 1 ORPHEUS Spring 2018 Volume XX No. 1 Editors Katie Brown Micah Stewart-Wilcox Jimmy Temples Faculty Advisor Dr. Allison Egnew Smith Founder Dr. Tip H. Shanklin ORPHEUS SPRING 2018 The Lyre of Orpheus Placed Among the Stars Drawing by Eduard von Engerth (1818-1897) A Publication of Lindsey Wilson College © Copyright 2018 All Rights Reserved www.lindsey.edu/orpheus Editorial and Standards Policy The editorial staff of Orpheus welcomes and encourages submissions of poetry, short fiction, creative nonfiction, artwork, and photography from any current Lindsey Wilson College student. While preserving the freedom of creative expression, responsible standards of decency regard- ing language and images are carefully observed. The editors reserve the right to edit both the form and, in rare cases, the content of submissions. Final decisions regarding acceptance or rejection of questionable content are reserved for the editorial staff in consultation with the journal’s fac- ulty advisor. All submissions to Orpheus must be typed and must contain the fol- lowing information: name, phone number, local address, class, major, and hometown of the writer/artist. All artwork and photographs should be submitted in camera-ready black and white. Editorial and other staff positions are open to any current Lindsey Wilson College student based upon experience or interest. The ideas and views expressed in Orpheus are solely those of the writer/ artist and do not necessarily reflect the ideas and views of the editorial staff or those of Lindsey Wilson College. Table of Contents Preface . 9 Katie Brown . 32, 54, 92 Mikayla Evans . 64 Caitlin Freeny . 62, 76 Hailey Fox . 37, 39, 41, 43, 46 Olivia Garlt . 52, 58, 74, 77, 81 Micah Holmes . 63 Kaitlyn Jackson . 28, 89 Hosanna Emily Konsavage . 23, 33, 36, 53 Sarah Kuchar . 61, 65, 73 Chris Nettleton . 15 Esther Olson . 18, 31, 98 Madison Porter . 79 Samantha Proctor . 68 Trevor Stonecypher . 85 Skyler Smith . 27, 34, 70, 90 Micah Stewart-Wilcox . 35, 50 Jimmy Temples . 51, 82, 91, 95 Hannah VanArsdale . 21, 56 Notes on Contributors . 99 Front Cover, “Past Orpheus Covers: A Collage,” by Skyler Smith Back Cover Photo “El Eclipse,” by Arnoil Garcia Lindsey Wilson College 7 Preface Dr. Tip H. Shanklin A tree rising. What a pure growing. Orpheus is singing. ~ Rainer Maria Rilke, from Sonnets to Orpheus In the inaugural volume of Orpheus, as the founder and first faculty ad- viser, I wrote about the need for a literary journal at our college that would provide a forum for the creative talents and voices of our stu- dents, regardless of their major or class standing. As this is the twentieth anniversary edition of the journal, it is especially gratifying to say that it has more than fulfilled that need. The hundreds and hundreds of poems, short stories, photographs, and art works that over the years have filled the covers and pages of Orpheus serve as archival milestones in both the life of the journal and the lives of all the student contributors. Their en- ergy and dedication has helped keep the journal vibrant and ever grow- ing. In looking ahead, while I am confident that Orpheus will continue (excellence is a never-ending journey), as the ancient Greeks cautioned, one cannot rest on one’s laurels, and so a new initiative is in the works to keep Orpheus singing for another twenty years. Lastly, I would like to include a poem I wrote especially for the inau- gural volume of Orpheus at the editors’ request. At the time, it was my vision of the future I wished for the journal’s purpose and success. Hap- pily, that vision continues. Lindsey Wilson College 9 Wild Should A River Be A river should be wild and hard to cross – as hard as . no, harder, even, I think, than a simile or a metaphor for that which is difficult. But what is it that happens? The artifice of a bridge is constructed, first of mind design, and site plan, then body-built – hands, backs, sweating over and across the river’s threat to connection of life to life, of town to town, of friend to friend, even now impeding the commerce that once needed and used its watercourse way. But no. A bridge is too easy once it’s there suspended in and defying place, hurrying the time, easing the effort it would otherwise take to cross the river. Wild should a river be, sufficient in its swift flowing, even overachieving sufficiency, when, in Spring, its form – such as it seems to the eye to have — floods past the leaning sycamores, spreading round and over the bridge into the fenland, the low, bottom earthfield, the dark loam of life. And the mind could – should, one might say – be freed to river itself – think of it! – from noun to verb (I river, you river, she/he rivers); the rivering mind of poem-making and storycraft, of line and sketch; the rivering mind Lindsey Wilson College 11 headed through the rich vale of thought and language and vision, without the threat of disconnection, holding us and keeping us, ironically boundless, rivering, rivering downstream, you and I, together, toward what is new. THS 3/18 12 Orpheus 2018 dawn Humans Christopher Nettleton “This is very impressive, my Lord.” ”Thank you. But you sound as if you have reservations.” ”Well, yes.” ”Speak freely.” ”Those humans, the ones that look kind of like you, they’re kind of defenseless.” ”Yes. They are.” ”If they ever leave, they’ll die. They have no claws or fangs, and they’re too slow to avoid predators.” ”You are right.” ”So you just made them to keep you company here? Unable to leave you?” ”Almost. I gave them a much higher intelligence than most other crea- tures.” ”I see. They’ll go out and see the behaviors of other creatures and emulate them.” ”To an extent, yes. They’ll see lions and live in prides. They’ll see wolves and hunt in packs. They’ll see vultures and begin to scavenge. They’ll see ants and hoard their supplies. They may even see us and build tools.” ”Well, there’s still a big problem with that. You know that I don’t mean to criticize your works, my Lord.” ”I know you. You simply wish to understand.” ”So these humans, using intelligence, will begin to rise as individu- als. One may rise as a leader over other humans. But all humans, even any alpha human, would live in fear of crossing the wrong human. Even- tually, the alpha human would die, and the pack would lose all the knowl- edge and experience that the alpha had. He wouldn’t have wanted to share it. Sharing such knowledge would have made the alpha easy to overthrow.” ”You’re almost right. You forget that they are intelligent. They won’t leave the Garden for long, even though they do have the option to sur- vive out there. They have everything they need here, without having to live in fear of predators or each other. No alpha human would ever rise here. There would be no reason to, not here.” ”But out there, they still could, right?” Lindsey Wilson College 15 ”They’ll come back. Leaving me just causes them pain and hardship. And they will be welcomed back.” ”I see. Once their independence experiment goes wrong, they can just return. So I guess it comes back to my original question. You created these humans just to keep you company? Unable to leave?” ”Again, you’re missing something. Look there.” ”Oh. Is that what it appears to be?” ”Yes, my friend.” ”They get to have that kind of knowledge too?” ”I dearly hope not. I told them not to take it.” ”Then why is it here?” ”They are intelligent. They have free will. I expect they will take it given the choice.” ”My Lord!” ”I don’t want them to take it.” ”If they have morality and eternal life, they will be like us!” ”Do not worry. If they take the knowledge, they will leave. They will be escorted out.” ”They’ll die out there!” ”Yes. But they won’t go into extinction out there.” ”Because they’ll live in packs, in fear? But they’ll never go any farther than that!” Yes. Some will live in packs, in fear, as you say. But most will live in families, in love.” ”Humans? In families?” ”Yes. Their newfound morality will allow and even demand it. It will allow them to pass down knowledge from generation to generation, be- cause no parent will fear their child using knowledge against them in love as they would in fear. Therefore, humans will grow as a species and thrive on knowledge.” ”You know, my Lord, that if given the educated choice, some of these humans will kill themselves spiritually. Maybe all of them will.” ”Yes. It will hurt me. But I have a Plan to win my humans back.” ”I see.” ”No. You don’t. But you will soon.” ”My Lord?” ”Yes, friend?” ”Your Plan hinges on these humans betraying you, right?” ”Yes. Over and over and over. Every single one of them will betray me.” 16 Orpheus 2018 ”Will that not hurt you?” ”I know they will hurt me, but that does not mean that it will ever not hurt. Nor will I ever give up on them.” ”Will the pain caused by this choice you give them make them hate you for giving it to them?” ”It may. But many others will love me for it.” ”My Lord, please allow me to take that burden from you.
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